The problem I had was that I accidently partitioned the main drive (which should be C into 2 partitions.

1 partition is 2 gig the other 10 gig. the 2 gig is showing as the C: drive and the 10 is showing as the G:. I also have another HD which is D: but not in question at this point.

The G: drive is the drive containing the OS and the C: has nothing. I tried changing the drive letters from C to G and G to C but it tells me that it can not change a boot volume. The G: drive is listed as the Logical.

Can someone help me out here or should I just leave the G as the primary???

Can someone help me out here or should I just leave the G as the primary???

Is G: logical or primary?

This can be dangerous. U can delete the C, move G to the beginning of the drive or merge C and G... very dangerous though.. it can screw your system and make it unable to boot. I would suggest a re-install (re-partition first)

Ok, I reformatted the drive and ran into another issue..lol (figures)When I boot up, right before the Windows 2000 start up screen it says "Please select an OS to start and I have a listing of (2) Window 2000 OS's. Regardless of which one I hit or just wait the 30 seconds it boots up without a hitch.
My question is....

Oh man, you didn't have to format! Well, for future reference its just a little registry editing that needs to be done. Warning, though, any programs installed AFTER the system disk became the G: drive may need reinstalling because it will be looking to the G: drive and not the C:. Anyhow, to change the system disk, do the following...

1. Run regedit and goto the following key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\MountedDevices